Mouse Trapping Becoming More Popular
from the nooooooooooooooooooooooo dept
Well, hopefully, this won't go the way of the pop-up window which now (tragically) has almost become an accepted concept for many sites. It seems that some fairly well known sites have started engaging in mouse trapping, where you are prevented from hitting the back button on your browser to get out of the site. Among the big names doing this are Amtrak and Home Depot. They (of course) claim they have good intentions, but it's scary that this could become a lot more common. Home Depot appears to have gotten rid of their mouse-trapping (though they do have a pop-up window). Oh yeah, and for a little while I thought this might be an article on web usability that didn't quote Jakob Nielsen, but he shows up about two-thirds of the way down.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Never attribute to malice...
One could also argue that functional browser software should do what the user wants it to, and if the back button doesn't return the user to the page he was previously viewing, it's broken.
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Too much
Until all that stuff is removed (or at least, we have the option to REASONABLY disable most of it), its only going to get worse and unscrupulous webmasters WILL use it to THEIR advantage (not YOUR convenience as they will likely say)
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Hah!
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Re: Hah!
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No Subject Given
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